Quote from sle:
Something is wrong with these numbers. An average employee of a Wall Street firm (be it a fund or a bank) did not bring home $600k in total compensation even in the best of times (2006-2007). I think average wall street income is more like $350k and I am not even sure where Miller-Samuel takes this data.
Once the average number is right, you'd have to correct the total compensation for
(a) education, with a proper quality corrector, so you don't compare MIT graduates with the graduates of University of Arizona, Phoenix
(b) location of employment - to give you a sense, many police officers and firemen in the NYC bring home over two hundred thousand
(c) total value of current and future benefits (Wall Street has none to speak of)
(d) hours laboured - an average securities firm employee in the New York City works 55 hours a week
I would love for someone to do that analysis...
One thing that people seem to ignore with respect to Wall Street employment is the volatility of income and uncertainty of employment.Quote from Banjo:
Thanks for chiming in. Thought it seemed screwy.
Yup, if you take the five-six thousand people that work in direct revenue producing roles or in senior management, these numbers do make sense. This, however, is very much like saying "look at the top actors income" when looking at the entertainment industry.Quote from newwurldmn:
Look at front office only and the numbers are closer to making sense.
Quote from sle:
Something is wrong with these numbers. An average employee of a Wall Street firm (be it a fund or a bank) did not bring home $600k in total compensation even in the best of times (2006-2007). I think average wall street income is more like $350k and I am not even sure where Miller-Samuel takes this data.
Quote from sle:
One thing that people seem to ignore with respect to Wall Street employment is the volatility of income and uncertainty of employment.
E.g. a NYC police officer has to work for 20 years to be guaranteed a nice pension. For a beat cop it's 58k a year, for a detective 60k a year. Now, that's a guy that did two years of community college (pretty much free), took the cop exam at the age of 21 and retired at the age of 42. PV that, include the inflation adjustments and you get numbers on the order of 2 to 3 million dollars.
I do not think an average wall street employee has a nest egg of 2 million dollars by the age of 42, especially considering the tax rates.